By Georgette Heyer
Nobody expected the Earl would die in his early fifties. He left behind his daughter Serena and his wife Fanny. Fanny was the Earl's second wife and is a couple years younger than her stepdaughter Serena. The Earl was a very wealthy man and he and Serena moved among the upper classes of Regency Britain secure in their place in the world. Although Serena is not the Earl's heir, she knows she will inherit a large fortune, including the estates of Hernesley and Ibshaw. The Earl's main residence, Milverly Park, will pass into the hands of his heir, Hartley Carlow, who is now the Sixth Earl of Spenborough and Serena's cousin.
When Serena was younger, she was engaged to Ivo Rotherham, a friend of the Fifth Earl and a near neighbor, a man Serena knew all her life. Like Serena and the Earl, Ivo is also a man of wealth and property. Ivo has a reputation as an unpleasant and haughty person. Serena, also a rather haughty woman, clashed frequently with Ivo and broke off their engagement. So when her father's will was read and she heard that her father had appointed Ivo as her trustee, in control of all her money and of whose approval she would have to get if she ever wanted to marry in the future, she just about exploded.
Clearly it is her dead father's attempt to bring Serena and Ivo back together as he was very disappointed when she broke it off.
Serena and Fannie move into the Dower House when Hartley and his family move into Milverley Park. But living so close to her old home is hard on Serena, especially as she observes all the changes the new owners are doing to what was her home for all her life. So she and Fanny move to Bath for a change of location and for a chance to socialize a bit more than they were able to do living in the Dower House.
Not long after moving there, Serena chances to meet an old boy friend of hers, Hector Kirkby. They rekindle their romance and become engaged. But it doesn't take Serena long to understand that Hector is not the man for her. Hector also may be realizing that he is not the man for Serena. He is actually rather fearful of Serena's bad temper: "Forbid her! I?" he exclaimed. "She would most hotly resent it! Indeed, Lady Spenborough, I dare not!"
Meanwhile Ivo has announced that he is engaged to silly young girl of seventeen. So the two people who are clearly meant to be together find themselves engaged to marry the wrong people. It is a tangle, indeed.
Serena is not serene. She is a woman of strong opinions and used to getting her own way and accustomed to ruling the roost. Raised as the only child of an important and wealthy man, she is more than a little haughty and arrogant, as only those of her class can be. She is one of Heyer's less appealing heroines. And Ivo is one of Heyer's less visible heroes. He only makes a few appearances in the story and vanishes from the main part until he shows up towards the end. We don't see his and Serena's courtship at all, really, only in Serena's determination that Ivo not be jilted again do we realize how much she loves him. His love for her is not apparent at all until the very end of the story. Kind of a strange romance and not one of Heyer's better efforts, I think.
Review by Deb Barnum on AustenProse.
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